Digital Dish: Your weekly serving of tech news

S.A. Tweet Star of the Week: @quarryfm: Oh, the delectable bounty. Quarry Farmers & Ranchers Market promises a special cornucopia of locally made eats and treats with the fourth annual Holiday Unwrapping, a hearty serving of produce, meats and more from more than 30 market members.

You can follow the fun via the QFRM Twitter account, @quarryfm. The event runs

9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday in the parking lot near Whole Foods Market in the Alamo Quarry Market.

Expect tasteful wonders such as pastured turkeys and grass-fed beef, artisan pies and Colonial shrubs and other mouth-watering goodies, plus soaps and lotions, greeting cards and holiday aprons should you crave non-edible offerings. Even your dog can get in on the action with pet watercolor portraits by local artist Lesta Frank and healthy dog treats. #HomegrownForTheHolidays.

Play classic arcade games in your browser: And now a digital bounty of goodness. The Internet Archive recently opened the Internet Arcade, an online repository of hundreds of playable arcade games from the 1970s through the 1990s. You can get your Player 1 on at archive.org/details/internetarcade.

As TechCrunch reported, the Internet Arcade is part of the JSMESS project to emulate as many systems as possible. This means you can play coin-op classics like Galaga and Defender as well as obscure games you’d only find at sketchy laundromats like Hunch Back and Zzyzzyxx.

The Internet Arcade says Firefox offers the best playing experience, though it notes other Web browsers should work fine. Just don’t expect the most seamless game play. TC noted the arrow keys usually work for directions and Ctrl/Alt/space bar serve as primary buttons, but it can take trial and error to figure out a game’s controls.

At least you don’t have to hit the couch cushions for extra quarters. The 5 key inserts a coin.

Free Office for iPad, iPhone and Android: Want more free stuff? Sure you do. Microsoft now offers its Office suite free for iPad, iPhone and Android, the better to enjoy and edit Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents on the go.

The Verge reported the move after Microsoft announced a partnership with popular cloud storage service Dropbox. As the report pointed out, you no longer need an Office 365 subscription to edit your documents or store them in the cloud. Office for iPad lets you store documents on Dropbox, while a new iPhone app and preview of Office for Android tablets offer Dropbox integration.

Consumers can enjoy mobile Office power for free, but no such luck for businesses. The Verge said an Office 365 subscription will be required to edit documents stored on OneDrive for Business or Dropbox for business.

Video boost reduces buffering time by reducing the size of the video data, which its makers say should likewise increase your data savings. To activate it, tap the red “O” at the bottom of the Opera Mini 9 browser, then tap the Savings Enabled summary to access the Video Boost tab.